Long-lost remains of last Tasmanian tiger stored in museum cupboard The remains of the last-known thylacine — thought lost for more than 85 years — were in a cupboard at a Tasmanian museum ...
Natives of Australia, the thylacines, are well known to have gone extinct in the 1930s. As far as we know, the last thylacine ...
An international group of researchers led by the University of Tasmania has taken a fresh look into the disappearance, and ...
Nobody writes an obituary for the last of a species dying alone in the wild. So, knowing precisely when to confirm an ...
A recent study led by Professor Barry Brook from the University of Tasmania has claimed that the thylacine, commonly known as the Tasmanian tiger, could still be alive in the wilderness.
A new study from the University of Tasmania led by international researchers shed new light on the extinction of Tasmania's most enigmatic creature, the Thylacine. Duncan is a journalist at The ...
The Tasmanian tiger could have survived in the wild for decades longer than thought, potentially into the early 2000s, and there is a 'very small' chance it still exists, a study suggests.
The Tasmanian tiger may have survived until the 1980s or even later, according to a new study that confirms sightings of this ...
Last known thylacine died in 1936 but new research suggesting the animals may have survived longer in the wild ‘relies on a lot of maybes’, expert says The date 7 September 1936 is widely ...
The rules around the granting of permits to kill wombats have been tightened, but the Wombat Warrior group is warning of another Tasmanian tiger-style extinction debacle under the government's watch.